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  1.  6
    Darwin and the French: The species question and ‘man’ in Oceania.Bronwen Douglas - 2022 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 91 (C):168-180.
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    Philosophers, Naturalists, and Antipodean Encounters, 1748-1803.Bronwen Douglas - 2013 - Intellectual History Review 23 (3):387-409.
    This article addresses a complex nexus of discourse and praxis: varying Enlightenment visions of Man; emergent ideas about human differences; and encounters between European scientific voyagers and Indigenous people in New Holland (Australia) and Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) at the start of the nineteenth century. Discursively, I trace two strands of ?anthropological? thinking. One, philosophical and economic, is epitomized in French and Scottish stadial theory. The other is naturalist and culminated in Buffon's natural history of man. Both were appropriated from (...)
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  3.  21
    ‘Polynesians’ in the Brazilian hinterland? Sociohistorical perspectives on skulls, genomics, identity, and nationhood.Ricardo Ventura Santos & Bronwen Douglas - 2020 - History of the Human Sciences 33 (2):22-47.
    In 1876, Brazilian physical anthropologists De Lacerda and Peixoto published findings of detailed anatomical and osteometric investigation of the new human skull collection of Rio de Janeiro’s Museu Nacional. They argued not only that the Indigenous ‘Botocudo’ in Brazil might be autochthonous to the New World, but also that they shared analogic proximity to other geographically very distant human groups – the New Caledonians and Australians – equally attributed limited cranial capacity and resultant inferior intellect. Described by Blumenbach and Morton, (...)
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